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03

Apr 2022

Last Updated: 01/04/2022
Environment
Environment

Yorkshire Dales Park Authority approves ambitious £11.2m spend

by Stuart Minting Local Democracy Reporter

| 03 Apr, 2022
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The Yorkshire Dales National Park Authority has been given the go-ahead its ambitious plans but the authority has had to find the money through new sources as government funds dwindle.

yorkshire-dales-national-park

The Yorkshire Dales National Park Authority has approved its most ambitious programme of projects since being established in 1954.

But a meeting of the authority at Tennants in Leyburn heard that the £11.2 million spending plan for the coming financial year would be unsustainable in coming years as government funds had halved and it was being supported by new external funding and the extensive use of reserves.

Officers have warned that without a rise in its government grant the scale of the necessary budget cutbacks are likely to result in reduced services and work programmes from next year.

Referring to its government grant, the authority’s director of conservation and community Gary Smith told members:

“Essentially we are getting the same amount now as we were getting in 2010. What has changed is the amount of income we have generated from other sources.”


The meeting heard the authority’s spending this year would soar by some 30% over last year, and featured a huge increase in funding for land management activities, partly due to the authority’s success in attracting grants from a range of bodies.




Read more:



  • Concerns over dwindling campsites in Yorkshire Dales

  • Yorkshire Dales park authority sets out £11.2m budget spend






Members were told the Defra-funded Farming In Protected Landscapes and Woodland Trust’s Grow Back Greener initiatives were each supporting three authority staff as well as directly investing almost £2 million into the national park’s farms and businesses.

After being asked if the authority should be holding back more of its reserves its chief executive David Butterworth said using them was partly about wanting to deliver on the authority’s aims.

He added the decision to use the majority of its unallocated reserves also related to being “a little nervous about any government and whether they may claw back some reserves if they felt national park authorities were hoarding”.

Mr Butterworth said the authority wanted the government to provide greater longevity for funding projects, likening the authority’s efforts to attract grants from Whitehall to “chasing petals”. Mr Butterworth said:

“When those petals fall away you are left with nothing.”


Ahead of members passing the budget, recreation management member champion Nick Cotton: 

“It is quite extraordinary to think this budget is 50 per cent core grant and 50 per cent self-funding. It is massively different to anything we have experienced in the past. We are into unknown territory.
“We have got a budget ahead of us this year that we can all be proud of, delivering more than we have ever done. We’re keeping an eye on how things will change for next year.”
“We have got a budget ahead of us this year that we can all be proud of, delivering more than we have ever done. We’re keeping an eye on how things will change for next year.”